As reported by iDB, a jailbreak for the Apple TV 4 and tvOS 9.1-10.1 was recently released by Jonathan Levin. If you’re interested in the ins and outs of his new tool, check out our article on the subject for more information.

In this guide we will focus instead on how to install the liberTV application to your Apple TV, and how to use it to jailbreak.

Instructions

4) Ensure that Impactor is showing your Apple TV as connected in its interface, and then drag the liberTV.ipa file onto the Impactor window.

5) Hit Start and Impactor will prompt you for your Apple ID and password. Enter them. If you have two-step verification turned on for your Apple ID account, you cannot enter your normal password. Instead, log in to the Apple ID page, and request an app-specific password. Enter that into Impactor in the password field.

6) Impactor will now push the jailbreak app to your Apple TV 4. Once it’s complete, disconnect the Apple TV from your computer and connect it to your TV via HDMI.

7) The liberTV app should now be visible on your tvOS home screen. Launch it.

8) On the following page, select the options you want to use to jailbreak your Apple TV. I recommend selecting all of them for the full experience, but a less powerful subset can be selected if required. See the image below for my recommended settings.

9) Hit the Do it! button at the bottom of the screen and wait. The app will try to jailbreak the device.

10) At this point, it will either fail and reboot, or report the device successfully jailbroken. If it fails, simply launch the app again and retry; it is normal for the app to fail some percentage of attempts.

11) Once the app reports that the device is jailbroken, you are done! You can now SSH into your device with Dropbear, sideload apps, and generally do as you will.

Please note, nitoTV is not updated yet and can cause catastrophic problems. Please wait for an update before attempting to sideload and use it.

The jailbreak is semi-untethered, so you will have to reuse the liberTV app after each power cycle of your Apple TV. However, this shouldn’t be as much of an issue as on iOS, as Apple TVs are generally left plugged in and on standby at all times.

Let me know your success stories if you try it out, and please leave any questions in the comments section.